Final Words

There’s a lot to like with the Anniversary Update, and as the first major update since Windows 10 shipped, it’s a good start for Microsoft on their new track of Windows as a Service. We’d already seen a couple of smaller updates since launch, fixing several outstanding items, but the Anniversary Update adds a lot more functionality to the operating system.

With the new Skype, Mail, and other Universal Windows Apps, Microsoft finally has a platform which works across all of their systems. It really has been a long dream, and only with the update to the Xbox One do we really have a universal platform. This should pay dividends going forward, with any app updates being available to all systems. For developers, there’s an opportunity to reach all of Microsoft’s platforms with a single app. Project Centennial should assist with those trying to bring older Win32 apps forward as well.

The updated tablet mode is all about small changes. Using Windows 10 in a purely touch environment is definitely a better experience. Windows 8.1 was pretty good here, but the app selection was weak at best, so Windows 10 is now a superior platform for touch on the Windows side.

The Bash shell was a pretty big surprise at Build, but it makes a lot of sense with the new Microsoft. They’ve embraced open source in a way that didn’t seem possible a few years ago, and their strive to bring developers to the platform has been the driving factor in the addition of a Linux system to Windows. They even call it Bash on Ubuntu on Windows.

Windows Ink is a better way to use the pen. Cortana has improved. But I think the biggest update was to Edge, which really needed extensions to even have a chance of getting use by many users. Edge has always rendered text very well, but it’s lack of extensions made it difficult to use daily. With this update, that should no longer be a problem.

Microsoft made thousands of changes to Windows 10, and there’s no way to go into all of them in a single article, but Windows as a Service has started out pretty well so far. The Anniversary Update really polishes a lot of the aspects of Windows 10, which didn’t necessarily feel rushed, but wasn’t exactly finished either. This update has helped out on a lot of the edges.

The Windows Insider Program has been the driving factor in the development, and it doesn’t appear to be ending any time soon. Microsoft has found a way to tap into millions of people’s feedback and ideas to improve their product. It’s been an interesting road to Redstone, and now that Redstone 1 has shipped we should start to see the new features coming to Redstone over the next several months. For now, the Windows 10 Anniversary Update will start rolling out in waves today, so check your Windows Update.

Tablet Mode changes, Windows Everywhere, and Skype
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  • jlabelle2 - Wednesday, August 17, 2016 - link

    - 1. Major - It enables Windows Defender

    Yeah. Remove any 3rd party anti-virus you have. It makes no sense. Slow down things for no benefit.
  • mgraymond - Wednesday, August 3, 2016 - link

    Where did you get the Ruined Castle wallpaper?
  • Zingam - Wednesday, August 3, 2016 - link

    So will Windows 10 Upgrade install on my laptop or I will have a huge problem just like with the Upgrade from Windows 8 to 10? Yes, after the upgrade Windows 10 works fine but the Upgrade would lock and I don't remember anymore what I had to do to make it complete. But I wasted several days and many failed attempts to install it.
  • K_Space - Wednesday, August 3, 2016 - link

    I can't seem to be able to install Edge extensions without being logged on Store. I am assuming there is no work around that one? meh, back to Firefox.
  • mkozakewich - Wednesday, August 3, 2016 - link

    Q: "Why didn't the pickle wear his shirt?"
    A: "Because he was brining sexy back!"
  • K_Space - Thursday, August 4, 2016 - link

    Ouch! Local backup was installed on a BitLocked HDD. Now it shows as unformatted. Anyone got a similar issue?
  • boeush - Thursday, August 4, 2016 - link

    Meh... I have 2 new Win 10 Pro laptops from very different vendors (Sager and HP.) And after update, both still wake from sleep with fingerprint reader not working. Prior to update, one had periodic crashes of the 'explorer' process leading to corruption of desktop; restarting the process would fix it - haven't yet seen that issue since update, there hasn't been much time yet and I'm not holding my breath.

    Microsoft continues its long-established pattern to ship half-baked, unfinished, buggy, poorly tested software and systems, so that I feel like I'm constantly running on beta software at best (and early alpha at worst.)
  • Murloc - Thursday, August 4, 2016 - link

    consumer laptops are better left with the OS they shipped with really, support by vendors just sucks.
  • MrTuKer - Wednesday, August 10, 2016 - link

    Or alternatively installing an efficient non-spying OS like Linux Ubuntu !
    Linux works fine on my Laptops, mind you they both are i7's with 980m GPU's and have 512GB SSD's and 16GB and 32GB of ram.
    They were both Win 7 64 Pro Laptops thats why they have so much ram whereas Linux only really needs 8GB !
  • milkod2001 - Thursday, August 4, 2016 - link

    Since im on W10 im experiencing weird blue screens. It only happens on desktop start up. It always shows random issue. It will switch off computer then. After i switch on computer back again it will boot system and then it is 100% stable. Anybody experiencing the same?

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